[Vlad Goldin]

After a somewhat prolonged process, Michigan formally announced the addition of Vlad Goldin last week. 

In our internal slack chats I wasn't so subtle in stating that Goldin would be a bigger get in relation to Johnell Davis regardless of what any transfer ranking would have you believe. Seven-footers with true two-way impact aren't typically available for programs such as Michigan, particularly those in the portal. The necessary resources typically exceed what Michigan can reasonably offer.

It would be an understatement to say that I'm excited about Goldin.  This is a massive pick-up for the Wolverines, both literally and figuratively.

 

SCOUTING (Offense)

First and foremost, Vlad is an outstanding finisher at the rim. He converted 72% of his 200 attempts at the rim last season. Goldin routinely finishes over length and through contact.

I have zero doubts as to whether this facet of his game will translate, as the clips above have Vlad finishing over Charleston behemoths James Scott/Ante Brzovic and Coleman Hawkins with relative ease. The volume lends credence to this as well, as a whopping 200 out of 303 total FGAs from Goldin last season were at the rim per Torvik. He's going to own the restricted area. 

The thing that really popped on film review is Vlad's impeccable touch. He consistently converts "other twos". Functionally those come in the form of jumphooks, and he's superb using both hands.An ambidextrous 7-footer with elite touch is quite the weapon at the college level. For context, Goldin shot 58.3% on 103 "other two" attempts per Torvik. That is ridiculous efficiency on high volume for a shot type that is generally considered sub-par. Having a 7-foot Tony Parker is hard to visualize, but here we are. 

Vlad is also adept as a back-to-the-basket scorer. He has above-average pivoting/footwork, understands where his spots are and is patient in getting to them. He doesn't settle much. 

Goldin does really well for himself absorbing initial contact and maintaining balance. He usually gets the better of his defender after that initial contact and leverages his superior size and impeccable touch to convert. 

[After THE JUMP: the exact archetype Michigan needs]

[247Sports]

Michigan Football recently picked up a commitment from Birmingham Groves OL Avery Gach, the second commitment since Sherrone Moore took over as head coach. Today we give him the proper Hello: 

 

GURU RATINGS 

RATINGS BY SITE

247: 6'5/290

On3: 6'4/270

Rivals: 6'5/285

ESPN: 6'5/280

4*, 90, #196 Ovr
#13 OT, #2 MI

3*, 89, NR Ovr
#32 IOL, #7 MI

4*, 5.8, #145 Ovr
#14 OT, #2 MI

4*, 80, #296 Ovr
#34 OT, #3 MI

4.23

3.86

4.27

4.01

COMPOSITE RANKINGS

247 Composite

On3 Consensus

MGoBlog

 

4*, 0.9138, #240 Ovr
#16 OT, #2 MI

4*, 90.37, #252 Ovr
#19 IOL, #2 MI

4*, #318/808 Ovr
#37/83 C/Gs since '90

4.14

4.04

4.10

Gach is a consensus four star, ranked just inside the top 250 of the On3 Consensus and the 247 composite. Rivals and 247 are the highest on Gach, putting him inside their top 200 and ranking him among the top 15 IOL prospects nationally. ESPN is a bit lower, just inside the top 300, but all three of those sites consider him a top three prospect in the state of Michigan. On3 is the rather bizarre outlier (something that their own EJ Holland heavily disagrees with in his pieces), ranking Gach as an irrelevant three star and 7th in the state of Michigan. According to Seth's five star scale, Gach overall grades out as a solid four and in the middle of the pack among all IOL prospects that Michigan has gotten commitments from since 1990. 

[AFTER THE JUMP: what the scouts say]

Michigan Hockey lost another impactful piece today, as defenseman Seamus Casey signed an Entry Level Contract with the New Jersey Devils: 

Casey was not featured in Peter's wrap-up exit piece a few weeks back, so I figured we ought to give him one here. Casey came to Michigan from the USNTDP, a native of South Florida born in Miami and raised in Fort Myers. He was drafted 46th overall in the 2022 NHL Entry Draft by the Devils, an intriguing mix of skill and skating ability with the drawback being his small frame and inconsistencies defensively. The scouting report that we were handed by the NHL Draft scouts that summer more or less came to fruition, as Casey was exactly that for the Wolverines. 

Over two seasons in the Maize & Blue, Casey was a consistently high scoring defenseman. As a freshman in 2022-23, he was second to fiddle to Luke Hughes when it came to ice time and power play opportunities, but Casey still found ways to rack up points, scoring eight goals and 29 points in 37 games. The breathtaking skill (hands especially) that is so rare for a defenseman was on display in the biggest stage that the team played on last season: 

After Hughes departed for the NHL, Casey returned for his sophomore season and inherited those increased responsibilities. As the point man on Michigan's historically great power play, Casey probably had the biggest hand of anybody not named Brandon Naurato when it came to getting the PP to exceptional levels. Casey was a wizard with his dekes, fakes, and edge-work at the blue line, a master at beating the high forward through his deception and general slipperiness, creating numbers advantages for Michigan down low, which they exploited countless times. At 5v5 he was also impactful, a puck-rushing defenseman who helped create offense at an exceptionally high level. He was reunited with USNTDP defense partner Tyler Duke, who had transferred in from Ohio State, and those two formed a solid pair for the Wolverines, one that was sometimes liable to having its lack of size and strong defensive ability exploited but they normally won their minutes. 

All in all, Casey scored 45 points in 40 games this past season earning All-B1G First Team and All-American honors. He was one of the highest scoring defenseman in the NCAA and helped get Michigan in position to make a second Frozen Four with him on the roster, even if he was unable to play in the decisive game against Michigan State due to injury. Signing with the Devils, Casey will likely start next season with the Utica Comets of the AHL. The New Jersey Devils had a deeply disappointing season and already have three right-shot defensemen on the roster when fully healthy (Dougie Hamilton, Šimon Nemec, and John Marino), not to mention two very young defenders (Nemec and Hughes). I doubt that promoting another offense-first defenseman under the age of 22 (who is also right handed) is the solution they are looking for to get the franchise back into the postseason. Thus he will probably simmer for some time in the AHL before a position on the NHL roster can open up. 

As for Michigan, it is an unfortunate blow, but not one they were necessarily ill-prepared for. The team is returning Ethan Edwards, Tyler Duke, and Jacob Truscott from last season's top five defensemen group and are adding in elite transfer Tim Lovell (Arizona State). That gives them a rock solid top four and then have the option to either add another transfer or rely on an expansive freshman class of defensemen to fill the other holes (Luca Fantilli is also still around). Among the incoming freshmen include puck-moving RHD (who could be a Casey replacement) Gennadi Chaly, big and defensive RHD Hunter Hady, solid USNTDP LHD Dakoda Rheaume-Mullen, and undersized USHL LHD Jack Willson. Casey will certainly leave a void in the team's offensive output but the combination of having a core group of established college players returning on defense and bringing in a deep and versatile freshman class means that Brandon Naurato shouldn't have too much trouble fielding a solid blue line in 2024-25. 

There is no content after the jump. 

continuing the series from yesterday

checking in how our hockey stars of yore are doing in the pros 

Why? What is he gonna do, perform at a college level?

Tuttle the receiver.

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